23 Mich. 80 | Mich. | 1871
This was ejectment by Traphagen to recover two separate parcels of land in Oakland county.
The case was tried without a jury, and the facts found, so far as relevant to the points raised, are as follows:
In September, 1846, Nathaniel Traphagen, the father of defendant in error, died, seized of the land, leaving Mary Traphagen, his widow, and the defendant in error, his son and only heir; that letters of administration were issued to the widow and to Abraham H. Traphagen, the father of decedent, who regularly qualified and entered upon the trust and continued in office until the estate was settled; that the land in question was appraised at four hundred dollars, and demands allowed by the judge of probate, acting as commissioner, ágainst the estate to four hundred and seventy-seven dollars and sixtv-one cents; that after deducting the authorized allowances, no personal property remained to pay the debts, and the administratrix and administrator applied, in November, 184?, for a license to sell the real estate, which was duly granted in July, 1847, and which directed the order of sale of the several parcels; that the administratrix refused to proceed any further in the matter of sale after the obtainment of the license, whereupon the administrator went on and gave the required bond and took the oath prescribed, advertised the premises to be sold at a specified and proper time and place, and sold the two parcels at one lid, subject to the widow’s right of dower, to Margaret A. Miller for two hundred and twenty-five dollars; that this sale occurred on the 17th of June, 1848, the widow then residing on the premises, and by her attorney forbidding the sale; that on the 19th day of June, 1848, the judge of probate duly confirmed this sale, and on the 4th day of June, 1849, the administrator conveyed the premises to the pur
The court found, as matter of law, that the execution of the deed was defective, because only one of the administrators signed and executed it, wherefore it was a case of defective execution of a power, which could not be remedied on the law side of the court. Judgment was accordingly given for defendant in error.
The errors specifically assigned are that the court erred in these findings of law.
The discussion at the bar took a broader range; but no question is before us that the findings do not present. The plaintiff in error contends that it was not essential that the representatives should join in the deed, and that the court of probate, having obtained and possessed jurisdiction and granted a proper license, the matters objected to were mere irregularities at the most, which could not be taken advantage of in this way.
The defendant in error insists that the sale was illegal and void, first, because the sale and conveyance were by one only of the two representatives when the license was given to two; second, because two separate and distinct parcels were sold at one bid; third, because the sum bid was not paid in full before the deed was given; fourth, because the deed was not delivered within a year from the
The regulation to sell in parcels is a wise one, but it ought not to be considered so fundamental as to make its non-observance . in every case absolutely fatal to the title under all circumstances. The situation of landed property is infinitely varied. In many instances blocks and other bodies of land are subdivided into contiguous lots or parcels by arbitrary lines, and the parts are so situated in reference to each other as naturally to lead to proceedings respecting separate or distinct parcels as though they were one. The chances for error through mistake or inadvertence in such a matter are very great.
It is true that in the present case it is claimed that these lands were wholly distinct. But we are asked to lay down a general rule, one which must include all cases where the regulation mentioned is omitted.
If the omission to sell in parcels in such a case cannot be shown in a collateral action to destroy the title, it certainly ought not to be allowed where the sale has been duly confirmed and the order of confirmation has never been disturbed.
The statute does not require the purchase money to be paid before the deed is given. For not exceeding three-fourths of the price the administrator is allowed to give credit for not more than three years, as the judge of probate directs or approves, — § S057, Comp. L.; and there is nothing in this record to indicate that the administrator did not conform his action to this provision. The presumption under all the circumstances is that he did so. But if he did not, it was one of those incidents which will not invalidate the title of a subsequent purchaser in the position of the plaintiff in error.
The omission to give the deed within a year from the order cannot be urged against the title. That question is settled by Howard v. Moore, 2 Mich., 226, and on satisfactory grounds. We see no occasion for re-opening it.
The points which have been considered were introduced as respectively sufficient to overturn the title derived from the administrator’s sale, by their own force, and in that view they have been discussed. We could not, in the state of this record, and therefore have not regarded any of them
The substantial question raised by the record is whether the refusal of the administratrix to join in the sale, her objection to it and subsequent omission to unite in the deed, can be urged in the suit by the heir to invalidate the title of the plaintiff in error. If the non-joinder and opposition of the administratrix rendered the sale by her co-representative void in the sense of being a nullity, if her non-participation and objection made the sale in contemplation of lajv as though it had never been, then no title could possibly be derived from it, and no act of confirmation by the probate court could give it vitality. On the other hand, if the sale, being made without her co-operation and against her will, was thereby rendered merely irregular or erroneous and voidable, then the due confirmation of it by the probate court invested it with such force and efficacy as a sale, that it would stand so long as the order of confirmation should be unimpaired, and could not be invalidated on the same ground in any collateral action. The sale is bound up with the order of confirmation, and can be overthrown for no reason not sufficient to overthrow the judgment of the probate court.
Was the sale void? The court finds that the license was duly granted. The court of probate had jurisdiction. There was no personal property to pay debts. The estate was indebted and this land belonged to it. The creditors had a positive right to have this land converted into cash to pay, or go as far as it might in paying their debts. The representatives were under a strict duty to seek a license from the court for the sale of the land, in order to use the proceeds in paying the debts, and in obtaining such
If after the license was obtained the administratrix had been removed for obstructing the sale or the settlement of the estate, it will be admitted that the subsequent proceedings would not have been invalidated in consequence of her not uniting in them. The fact that she objected to the sale would be of no moment if she had united in the proceedings and deed. The material thing is that she did not unite in the proceedings. Having failed to qualify herself for the special function and not possessing the character required by law for the specific duty, her co-representative clothed himself with the qualities essential to the special trust, and thus held alone an interior office in the administrator’s office. He went on alone and made the sale. No other person was authorized, because no one else had become competent. The probate court, in which the administrator had qualified himself for the special duty, confirmed the sale and ordered a conveyance.
The probate court could not compel the administratrix to qualify herself for the sale of the land. It could, per
The giving of the deed stands upon the same ground. The order of confirmation required it to be given. The statute does not in terms declare who shall execute the deed. The sale, when confirmed, entitles the purchaser to a conveyance as evidence of his title; and the inference from the various provisions of the statute, relating to the subject, as well as from the nature of the thing itself, is that the administrator empowered to sell and making the sale is a proper party to execute the conveyance. It is not necessary to inquire whether, in any supposable cage, it might not be
Tbe judgment must be reversed, witb costs, and a new trial' ordered.